Pacific Ocean warming signals the possible return of a strong El Niño

tosh1 pts0 comments

Pacific Ocean warming signals the possible return of a strong El Niño - Met Office

Maps & charts

Climate

Specialist forecasts

Learn about...

Research programmes

The latest breakthroughs, research and news from the Met Office.

Our approach

Weather science

Climate research

Applied science

Foundation science

Library

Services

Support your business with world-leading science and technology.

Government

Transport

Business & industry

Data

Research & consulting

Insights

About us

Who we are, what we do and organisational news.

Who we are

How we are run

News & media

Contact us

Careers

Met Office College

National Meteorological Library & Archive

Weather Observations Website (WOW)

Who we are

How we are run

News & media

Contact us

Search site Search x

Who we are

Our people

Our values

Our history

Accuracy

Innovation

Impact

How we are run

The Met Office Board

Our governance structure

Public Weather Service

Our Chief Executive

The Executive Team

Non-Executive Directors

News & media

Media centre

Campaigns

Contact the Press Office

Weather & climate news

Corporate news

Official news blog

Contact us

Send us your feedback

Ways to contact us

How to find our offices

Information for visitors

Pacific Ocean warming signals the possible return of a strong El Niño

Author: Met Office

Wed 15 Apr 2026

A significant shift is underway in the tropical Pacific, with clear signs that an El Niño event is developing.

El Niño is one of the most important drivers of year‑to‑year climate variability on Earth, influencing weather patterns across large parts of the globe as well as global temperature. While it occurs far from the UK, its impacts can be felt worldwide.

What is El Niño?

El Niño refers to a sustained period of warmer‑than‑average sea surface temperatures across the central and eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean. It forms part of a natural cycle known as the El Niño–Southern Oscillation, which alternates between warm (El Niño) and cool (La Niña) phases.

These events do not follow a fixed timetable. They can vary in strength and duration, and the gap between episodes is irregular. Each El Niño is unique, but stronger events tend to have more widespread and pronounced global effects.

Crossing important thresholds

Sea surface temperatures across a key region of the central Pacific have been rising steadily in recent months. Observations show that temperatures have crossed important thresholds that are used internationally to identify El Niño conditions.

Satellite measurements also reveal that sea levels in this part of the Pacific are increasing. Warmer water expands, so rising sea level is another strong indicator that additional heat is building in the ocean. The pace and scale of these changes suggest a well‑established warming signal rather than a short‑lived fluctuation.

Forecasts based on multiple climate models point towards continued warming through the summer and to the end of the year. What stands out is how closely these forecasts agree with one another. When model projections cluster tightly together, it increases confidence that the overall direction of change is robust.

Grahame Madge, Senior press officer and climate science communicator at the Met Office said: “Other organisations around the world have other definitions and thresholds for what constitutes El Niño conditions, but this will be such a significant event, if it happens, that it will be above all of those thresholds and there will be no doubt that we’re in an El Niño.”

How strong could this event become?

Current projections suggest this El Niño could become a strong event, potentially comparable with some of the most impactful episodes in recent decades. El Niño events often peak towards the end of the year, with maximum influence typically felt between November and February.

There has been discussion in the media about a “super” El Niño. While that term is not officially recognised by the Met Office, there is growing confidence that this event could sit at the upper end of the historical range.

Grahame explained: “A ‘super’ El Niño is not a term we subscribe to, but it does underpin the fact that this is likely to be a significant event. Scientists are telling us that this could be the strongest El Niño event this so far century, comparable to the notable El Niño event in 1998.”

Global temperature implications

Historically, many of the warmest years on record have coincided with El Niño events. However, this warming effect sits on top of a longer‑term upward trend driven by human‑induced climate change. As a result, when a strong El Niño develops in today’s warmer climate, global temperatures can be pushed to particularly high levels.

Grahame continued: “An El Niño will impart heat into the atmosphere and, generally, raise global average temperatures by around a fifth of a degree Celsius. 1998 was a significant year for global temperature and, at the time, was the warmest year on...

office climate news event pacific strong

Related Articles